==President of Israel==
==President of Israel==
[[File:Flickr – Government Press Office (GPO) – President Chaim Herzog lighting the first candle of Hanukka.jpg|thumb|right|250px|President Herzog lighting a Hannukah candle. In the background is an [[Visual arts in Israel|Israeli artwork made of volcanic ash]].]]
[[File:Flickr – Government Press Office (GPO) – President Chaim Herzog lighting the first candle of Hanukka.jpg|thumb|right|250px|President Herzog lighting a Hannukah candle. In the background is an [[Visual arts in Israel|Israeli artwork made of volcanic ash]].]]
[[File:Flickr – Government Press Office (GPO) – Prersident Chaim Herzog and the Patriot missile system commander.jpg|thumb|right|250px|President Herzog visiting the commander of a Coalition [[MIM-104 Patriot|Patriot missile]] battery during the [[Gulf War]], February 1991.]]
On 22 March 1983, Herzog was elected by the [[Knesset]] to serve as the sixth President of Israel, by a vote of 61 to 57, against [[Menachem Elon]], the candidate of the right and the government coalition. He assumed office on 5 May 1983 and served two five-year terms (then the maximum permitted by Israeli [[Basic Laws of Israel|basic law]]), retiring from political life in 1993. As President of Israel, Herzog made official visits to over thirty countries and addressed fifteen national legislatures. He made the first Israeli presidential visits to the US and Canada. He was also the first Israeli President to visit [[West Germany]], where he visited the [[Bergen-Belsen concentration camp]] which he had helped liberate as a British Army officer during World War II.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1987/04/07/world/herzog-pays-visit-to-belsen-this-awesome-place.htmlas HERZOG PAYS VISIT TO BELSEN, ‘THIS AWESOME PLACE’]</ref> He also visited far-east countries such as China, Australia, Singapore, and New Zealand. During a 1992 visit to [[Spain]], he and King [[Juan Carlos I]] signed a symbolic order cancelling the [[Alhambra Decree]] which had ordered the expulsion of Jews from Spain 500 years before.<ref name=yadchaim/>
On 22 March 1983, Herzog was elected by the [[Knesset]] to serve as the sixth President of Israel, by a vote of 61 to 57, against [[Menachem Elon]], the candidate of the right and the government coalition. He assumed office on 5 May 1983 and served two five-year terms (then the maximum permitted by Israeli [[Basic Laws of Israel|basic law]]), retiring from political life in 1993. As President of Israel, Herzog made official visits to over thirty countries and addressed fifteen national legislatures. He made the first Israeli presidential visits to the US and Canada. He was also the first Israeli President to visit [[West Germany]], where he visited the [[Bergen-Belsen concentration camp]] which he had helped liberate as a British Army officer during World War II.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1987/04/07/world/herzog-pays-visit-to-belsen-this-awesome-place.htmlas HERZOG PAYS VISIT TO BELSEN, ‘THIS AWESOME PLACE’]</ref> He also visited far-east countries such as China, Australia, Singapore, and New Zealand. During a 1992 visit to [[Spain]], he and King [[Juan Carlos I]] signed a symbolic order cancelling the [[Alhambra Decree]] which had ordered the expulsion of Jews from Spain 500 years before.<ref name=yadchaim/>
In 1985, during his state visit to the [[Republic of Ireland]], Herzog visited [[Wesley College, Dublin]], opened the [[Irish Jewish Museum|Irish Jewish Museum in Dublin]], and unveiled a sculpture in honour of his childhood friend, [[Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh]], former [[Chief Justice of Ireland]] and, later, the fifth [[President of Ireland]], in [[Sneem]] Culture Park, [[County Kerry]].
In 1985, during his state visit to the [[Republic of Ireland]], Herzog visited [[Wesley College, Dublin]], opened the [[Irish Jewish Museum|Irish Jewish Museum in Dublin]], and unveiled a sculpture in honour of his childhood friend, [[Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh]], former [[Chief Justice of Ireland]] and, later, the fifth [[President of Ireland]], in [[Sneem]] Culture Park, [[County Kerry]].
== Personal life ==
== Personal life ==
[[Image:Chaim Herzog gravestone.jpg|thumb|right|Herzog’s grave on Mount Herzl]]
[[Image:Chaim Herzog gravestone.jpg|thumb|right|Herzog’s grave on Mount Herzl]]
===Family===
===Family===
President of Israel from 1983 to 1993
Chaim Herzog (Hebrew: חיים הרצוג; 17 September 1918 – 17 April 1997)[1] was an Israeli politician, military officer, lawyer and author who served as President of Israel from 1983 to 1993. Born in Belfast and raised primarily in Dublin, the son of Ireland’s Chief Rabbi Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog, he immigrated to Mandatory Palestine in 1935. He served in the Haganah Jewish paramilitary group during the 1936–1939 Arab revolt and in the British Army during World War II. Following the end of the British Mandate and Israel’s Declaration of Independence in 1948, he served in the Israel Defense Forces and fought in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. He remained in the Israeli military as an officer following the war until retiring in 1962 with the rank of major-general.
After leaving the military, Herzog practised law. In 1972 he was a co-founder of Herzog, Fox & Ne’eman, which would become one of Israel’s largest law firms. Between 1975 and 1978 he served as Israel’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, in which capacity he denounced UN General Assembly Resolution 3379—the “Zionism is Racism” resolution—and symbolically tore it up before the assembly. Herzog entered politics in the 1981 elections, winning a Knesset seat as a member of the Alignment. Two years later, in March 1983, he was elected to the largely ceremonial role of President. He served for two five-year terms before retiring in 1993. He died four years later and was buried on Mount Herzl, Jerusalem.
His son Isaac Herzog, who between 2013 and 2017 led the Israeli Labor Party and was the parliamentary Opposition in the Knesset, is the incumbent President of Israel. The pair are the first father and son to have served as the nation’s president.[1]
Biography

Chaim Herzog was born at 2 Norman Villas, Cliftonville Road in Belfast, Ireland, as the son of Rabbi Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog, who was Chief Rabbi of Ireland from 1919 to 1937 (and later of Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel), and his wife Sarah (née Hillman).[2][3] His father was born in Łomża in what was then Congress Poland, part of the Russian Empire, and his mother Sarah Herzog was born in Riga, in what was then the Governorate of Livonia, also part of the Russian Empire at that time; his maternal grandfather was the Orthodox Jewish Talmudic scholar Shmuel Yitzchak Hillman. When Herzog was nine months old the family relocated to Dublin after his father became Chief Rabbi of Ireland.[4] The family home from 1919 was at 33 Bloomfield Avenue, Portobello, Dublin.

Herzog’s father, a fluent Irish speaker, was known as “the Sinn Féin Rabbi” for his support of the First Dáil and the Irish republican cause during the Irish War of Independence.[5] Herzog was raised as an Orthodox Jew and attended a traditional Jewish primary school, or cheder, as a child. He received a secular education at Wesley College, Dublin,[4] and was involved with the Federation of Zionist Youth and Habonim Dror, the Labour Zionist movement, during his teenage years.
In his youth, Herzog was also an athlete, becoming proficient in cricket, rugby, and boxing. He was a junior bantamweight boxing champion.[4][6]
Herzog emigrated to Mandatory Palestine in 1935, having been sent there by his parents to attend yeshiva, and studied at Mercaz HaRav and Hebron Yeshivas in Jerusalem. In 1937 he was joined there by his parents upon his father being chosen as Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of Palestine. He also joined the Jewish paramilitary group Haganah. During the 1936–39 Arab revolt in Palestine he served with the Haganah in Jerusalem, mainly in the Old City.[7][4] In 1938, he moved to the United Kingdom to study law at the University of Cambridge and University College London (UCL).[8] He earned a Bachelor of Laws from UCL in 1941 and qualified as a barrister at Lincoln’s Inn. Following his time at university, Herzog held the position of Chairman of the Union of Jewish Students (at that time named the Inter-University Jewish Federation).[9]
Military career


Herzog enlisted in the British Army in December 1942 during World War II and was trained as an officer at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. He was commissioned into the Intelligence Corps in 1943. He served as an intelligence officer in the Guards Armoured Division and was posted to Normandy in July 1944, taking part in operations across France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany. He was part of the first Allied formation to enter Germany and suffered ear damage in an artillery attack near Bremen.[4][2][10][11] He participated in the liberation of several Nazi concentration camps. After the surrender of Germany, Herzog served as the officer in charge of intelligence operations in several provinces of the British occupation zone in Germany from 1945 to 1947. He was tasked with identifying and interrogating Nazi officials. He helped to identify a captured German soldier as Heinrich Himmler. During this period he also helped facilitate the illegal clandestine transport of Jews from the Soviet occupation zone to help them try to reach Palestine.[4][12] He was discharged from the British Army in March 1947 as a war substantive captain and was granted the honorary rank of Major.[13]
While in the British Army, Herzog was given his lifelong parallel name of “Vivian” because his first commander could not pronounce “Chaim”; but another Jewish soldier explained to the commander that “Vivian” was the English equivalent of “Chaim“.[14]
After being demobilized from the British Army, he returned to Palestine and rejoined the Haganah, heading spying operations on the United Nations Special Committee on Palestine.[4] After the establishment of the State of Israel, he fought in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, serving as an officer in the battles for Latrun.
Herzog’s intelligence experience during World War II was seen as a valuable asset, and he became deputy director of the IDF Military Intelligence Branch in 1948, subsequently serving as director from 1949 to 1950. He used his experience as a British Army intelligence officer in World War II to lay the foundations of Israel’s military intelligence network. From 1950 to 1954, he served as military attaché at the Israeli Embassy in the United States.[4] Herzog left Washington in September 1954. A State Department official had informed him that he was about to be declared persona non grata. The decision to expel him had been taken following an FBI investigation into his attempt to recruit a Jordanian diplomat.[15]
He subsequently served as commander of the IDF’s Jerusalem District from 1954 to 1957 and as the head of Southern Command from 1957 to 1959. He again served as director of the Military Intelligence Branch from 1959 to 1962, during which time he introduced new technologies including computerization, enhanced intelligence cooperation with France, and established covert cooperation with the Iranian secret service SAVAK.[4] He retired from the IDF in 1962 but remained a reservist with the rank of major-general. In 1967, following the Six-Day War, Herzog was recalled into active service and appointed to be the first military governor of the West Bank and east Jerusalem, serving in this position until 1968.[4][16]
Post-military career and activities

After retiring from the army, Herzog was managing director of GUS-Rassco industrial conglomerate from 1962 to 1972. In 1965 he was among the founders of the Rafi political party which split from the Labor Party. He ran for the Knesset in the 1969 Israeli legislative election but was not elected.[4][7]
In 1972, Herzog went into partnership with Michael Fox and Yaakov Neeman, and established the law firm of Herzog, Fox & Neeman, one of the largest law firms in Israel.[17]
During the 1960s, Herzog appeared as a commentator in Israeli radio broadcasts and on the BBC, earning a reputation as Israel’s leading political and military analyst.[4][18] He was chief military commentator for Israel Radio during the Six-Day War and Yom Kippur War, making both radio and television commentary during the latter. His analysis immediately prior to and during the Six-Day War and the during the Yom Kippur War was credited with raising public morale.[4][16]
Herzog also established and chaired the Israeli chapter of the Variety children’s charity, served as President of the World ORT Union, and was also Chairman of Keter Publications, where he oversaw the completion of Encyclopedia Judaica. He was the author of several books, largely on Jewish and Israeli military history. His book on the Yom Kippur War is considered one of the cornerstones of study of that war. He published his memoirs in 1996.[7]
Diplomatic and political career

In 1975, Herzog was appointed Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations, in which capacity he served until 1978. During his term the UN adopted the “Zionism is Racism” resolution (General Assembly Resolution 3379), which Herzog condemned and symbolically tore up (as his father had done to one of the British white papers regarding the British Mandate in Palestine), saying: “For us, the Jewish people, this resolution based on hatred, falsehood and arrogance, is devoid of any moral or legal value. For us, the Jewish people, this is no more than a piece of paper and we shall treat it as such.” In recent years British historians headed by Simon Sebag-Montefiore have included this speech in a book on speeches that changed the world, which includes others by Martin Luther King Jr., Nelson Mandela, Winston Churchill and John F. Kennedy.[19] Furthermore, Herzog raised the voice against the indifference of some Jewish leaders who seemed “to act with indifference” to the light of the said condemnation against Zionism, he asked then: “Where is the Jewish people?” in The New York Times article titled: “Herzog Asserts Jews Didn’t Aid Israelis in U.N. Zionism Debate”.[20] After the publication of the editorial, “several letters of support arrived to the Israel delegation at the United Nations”, he had become a hero for the common Jewish American citizen.[21]
Herzog also provided the Israeli justification for the Entebbe raid to the UN and conducted the first contacts between an Israeli and Egyptian diplomat with Egyptian ambassador Ahmed Asmat Abdel-Meguid.[7]
In the 1981 elections, Herzog entered politics for the first time, winning a seat in the Knesset as a member of the Alignment, the predecessor to the Labor Party.
President of Israel


On 22 March 1983, Herzog was elected by the Knesset to serve as the sixth President of Israel, by a vote of 61 to 57, against Menachem Elon, the candidate of the right and the government coalition. He assumed office on 5 May 1983 and served two five-year terms (then the maximum permitted by Israeli basic law), retiring from political life in 1993. As President of Israel, Herzog made official visits to over thirty countries and addressed fifteen national legislatures. He made the first Israeli presidential visits to the US and Canada. He was also the first Israeli President to visit West Germany, where he visited the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp which he had helped liberate as a British Army officer during World War II.[22] He also visited far-east countries such as China, Australia, Singapore, and New Zealand. During a 1992 visit to Spain, he and King Juan Carlos I signed a symbolic order cancelling the Alhambra Decree which had ordered the expulsion of Jews from Spain 500 years before.[7]
In 1985, during his state visit to the Republic of Ireland, Herzog visited Wesley College, Dublin, opened the Irish Jewish Museum in Dublin, and unveiled a sculpture in honour of his childhood friend, Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh, former Chief Justice of Ireland and, later, the fifth President of Ireland, in Sneem Culture Park, County Kerry.
Herzog was also noted for pardoning the Shin Bet agents involved in the Kav 300 affair. He issued the pardons before they were to be tried in exchange for their retirement. This raised a public uproar but the Supreme Court of Israel ruled that it was legal.[23]
President Herzog reduced the sentences of Menachem Livni, Uzi Sharbaf and Shaul Nir, members of the Jewish Underground, who were sentenced to life imprisonment for the 1984 murder of four Palestinians in the West Bank town of Hebron. Herzog reduced the sentences, first to 24 years, then to 15 years, and in 1989, to 10 years, which enabled the men to be released two years later on good behaviour.[24][25]
Herzog was an opponent of Saddam Hussein‘s regime in Iraq, to which he referred to as a nest “of world terror”. He said the world largely dismissed Israel’s warnings that Baghdad was becoming a capital of world terrorism, adding that some Western countries helped Hussein develop into a military power.[26]
Commemoration
In 1998, the Ulster History Circle unveiled a commemorative blue plaque to Herzog at his birthplace on Cliftonpark Avenue, Belfast. The plaque was removed in August 2014 because it had been repeatedly vandalised with anti-Israel slogans. DUP councillor Brian Kingston said, “This is a shocking indication of the level of tension and anti-Semitism which currently exists in parts of Belfast.”[27][28]
A park is also named for him, Herzog Park, in Rathgar in south Dublin.[29]
A major thoroughfare in Jerusalem, Shderot Hanassi Hashishi (Sixth President Boulevard) is named for him.[30]
Personal life


Family
Herzog’s father was Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog, chief rabbi of Ireland and later Israel. His brother Yaakov Herzog served as Israel’s ambassador to Canada and later as Director General of the Prime Minister’s Office. He married Aura Ambache in 1947 and the couple had four children. One of their sons is Isaac Herzog, a politician who was the chairman of the Israeli Labor Party and chairman of the Jewish Agency and is now President of Israel, the first son of a president to serve as such.[31] Another son, Michael Herzog, served as a general in the IDF and as Israeli ambassador to the United States. His brother-in-law was diplomat Abba Eban, their wives being sisters.
Death
Herzog died on 17 April 1997 in Tel Aviv, from heart failure caused by pneumonia, at the age of 78.[1] He is buried on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem.
Works and publications
References
- ^ a b c Pace, Eric (18 April 1997). “Chaim Herzog, Former Israeli President, Dies at 78”. The New York Times. Retrieved 6 June 2016.
- ^ a b “Herzog, Chaim (1918–1997)”. Israel and Zionism. The Department for Jewish Zionist Education. Archived from the original on 26 September 2007. Retrieved 5 November 2007.
- ^ “Sara Herzog Dead at 82”. JTA. 16 January 1979. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Herzog, Chaim (‘Vivian’)
- ^ Benson, Asher (2007). Jewish Dublin. Dublin: A&A Farmer Ltd. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-906353-00-1.
- ^ Commemorations mark centenary of Chaim Herzog’s birth
- ^ a b c d e Chaim Herzog’s Life Story
- ^ Chaim Herzog (1918 – 1997)
- ^ Sunshine, Nick (27 June 2019). “UJS celebrates its centenary today, and we feel blessed”. www.thejc.com. Archived from the original on 16 November 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
- ^ Chaim Herzog – Knesset Website
- ^ “Supplement 36274”. The London Gazette. 3 December 1943. p. 5331. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
- ^ “Israeli statesman Chaim Herzog dies”. The Washington Post. 18 April 1997. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ “No. 37899”. The London Gazette (Supplement). 4 March 1947. p. 1116.
- ^ Herzog, Living History, p. 47.
- ^ Middle East International No 266, 10 January 1986, Publishers Lord Mayhew, Dennis Walters MP; Wilbur Crane Eveland III p. 14
- ^ a b Chaim Herzog
- ^ Noam Sharvit (26 June 2006). “BDI: Herzog, Fox & Neeman remains top Israeli law firm”. Globes. Archived from the original on 18 October 2015. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
- ^ ISRAELI STATESMAN CHAIM HERZOG DIES
- ^ “Herzog speech on Zionism makes history”. Ynetnews. 26 June 2007. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
- ^ “Herzog Asserts Jews Didn’t Aid Israelis in U.N. Zionism Debate”. The New York Times. 25 October 1975.
- ^ Katz Gugenheim, Ariela (2019). Boicot. El pleito de Echeverría con Israel (in Spanish). Mexico: Universidad Iberoamericana/Cal y Arena. ISBN 978-607-8564-17-0. Archived from the original on 10 April 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
- ^ HERZOG PAYS VISIT TO BELSEN, ‘THIS AWESOME PLACE’
- ^ The Authority of the President of the State of Israel to Issue Pardons
- ^ “3 Israeli Terrorists Are Released In 4th Reduction of Their Terms”. The New York Times. Associated Press. 27 December 1990. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
- ^ Alan Cowell (7 June 1989). “Documents given to Arabs in Gaza”. The New York Times. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
- ^ Steve Padilla; Ronald L. Soble (19 November 1990). “Herzog Calls Iraq a Nest of Terrorism”. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 9 September 2011.
- ^ “A distant conflict resonates in Northern Ireland”. The Economist. 3 August 2017. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
- ^ “Chaim Herzog son saddened that Belfast plaque removed”. BBC News. 13 August 2014. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
- ^ “Herzog Park | Dublin City Council”. www.dublincity.ie. 21 May 2018. Retrieved 26 May 2018.
- ^ Let us tour Eretz Yisroel
- ^ Hoffman, Gil (2 June 2021). “Isaac Herzog elected 11th President of Israel by wide margin”. The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2 June 2021.



